A Trust, organized to fight Scientology, will set up offices near the
'church' in downtown Clearwater.

By THOMAS C. TOBIN

St. Petersburg Times, published December 5, 1999

CLEARWATER -- An opposition group to the Church of Scientology said
Saturday it is well-financed and "here to stay" with plans for a
variety of activities, from speaking to school children and civic
groups to counseling Scientologists about leaving their church.
The group is called the Lisa McPherson Trust Inc., named for the 36-
year-old Scientologist who died in 1995 while in the care of church
staffers. Its intentions were made public during
a "Scientology / Clearwater Relations Conference" at a local hotel.
Also Saturday, about 40 anti-Scientology activists picketed in front of
Scientology buildings in downtown. Later, more than 60 people,
including McPherson's family from Texas, gathered to remember her at an
evening vigil.

Robert Minton, the New England millionaire who formed the new trust,
said its offices would be a "safe zone" for Scientologists and others
who find fault with the church or have questions that only its critics
would answer.

"We will be encouraging people to think for themselves, and we will be
offering people any information they want to listen to," Minton said as
he waved and held a picket sign at downtown's main crossroads,
Cleveland Street and Fort Harrison Avenue.

On his sign was a swastika with a Scientology cross at the center. It
said: "Stop Scientology's Hate, Lies and Bigotry."

Responding to Minton and the other pickets, Mike Rinder, a top
Scientology official, said: "The only ones spreading fear and hate in
Clearwater are those people."

He called the Lisa McPherson Trust "a hate group set up for profit and
for the personal benefit of Bob Minton."

Rinder added, "I don't think anybody in this community wants them
around."

When the trust registered with the state in October as a for-profit
corporation, church officials said it was a scheme by Minton to recoup
the $2.5-million he has spent so far on anti-Scientology causes.
But Minton, a 53-year-old retired investment banker, said Saturday that
if his motivation was money, he wouldn't be giving it away so readily
to anti-Scientology causes. He said he registered the group as a for-
profit to avoid the open financial reporting requirements of non-
profits and to prevent Scientology from harassing potential donors.
A full-time staff of six will operate the trust in a building that
Minton says he has contracted to buy in downtown. The building is said
to be adjacent to church property, but Minton is waiting to disclose
the location.

At the anti-Scientology conference, a small audience of the activists
heard from several speakers, including Peter Alexander and David
Cecere.

Cecere, a Scientologist from 1975 to 1992, will be the trust's
executive director. "We're here to stay. We're here for the long haul.
We're here to see the truth come out," Cecere told the group. "We're
going to be busy."

Alexander, a former Scientologist, said he spent $1-million on
Scientology over 20 years and last year moved his business from
Clearwater to Tampa to get away from the church. As one of the trust's
23 board members, he tried to find office space for the group but was
met, he said, with resistance from downtown landlords fearful of
Scientology.

Alexander said the new trust would be "the force that people can get
behind so they won't be afraid any more."